Moderate Chafee’s win in R.I. buoys GOP hopes

by The Associated Press on Sep 13, 2006, under Elections, Nation/World

Sen. Lincoln Chafee, R-R.I., prepares to address supporters last night in Providence. His campaign was seen as a test of anti-incumbent sentiment. If Chafee had lost, polls show the Democratic nominee was almost assured a win over Chafee's conservative challenger.

Moderate Republican Sen. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, who bucked President Bush on tax cuts and the war in Iraq, defeated a conservative challenger Tuesday in a contest crucial to the larger fight for control of Congress.

Chafee, whose challenge was the latest test of anti-incumbent sentiment and the polarization of politics, told supporters: “Our goal has always been to find the common ground for the common good. . . . Partisan politics must not prevail.”

Tuesday marked the last big day of primaries before the November elections, with races also in Arizona, Delaware, Maryland, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont, Wisconsin and the District of Columbia.

In New York, front-running Democrats swept aside primary challengers – Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton trounced an anti-war candidate in her re-election bid, Attorney General Eliot Spitzer crushed his opposition for the Democratic nod for governor, and Andrew Cuomo easily won the party nomination for attorney general.

In Minnesota, state Rep. Keith Ellison won the Democratic nomination for an open House seat that could make him the first Muslim in Congress. In a reliably Democratic district that’s voted close to 70 percent for the Democrat for nearly 30 years, he’s likely the fall winner, too.

In Rhode Island, the importance of holding onto a GOP Senate seat brought Laura Bush and the GOP establishment to campaign for Chafee – even though he was the only Republican to vote against the resolution to use force against Iraq and he opposed the president’s tax cuts. Chafee did not even vote for Bush in 2004 – instead writing in the name of Bush’s father, former President George H.W. Bush.

Polls show Chafee will still face a tough contest against Democratic nominee Sheldon Whitehouse, a former attorney general. But if Chafee had lost, polls showed Whitehouse was almost assured a victory. Democrats hope to build on national dismay with Bush to capture majorities in Congress, and they need six Senate seats.

Chafee, 53, was appointed to the Senate in 1999 after his father, Sen. John Chafee, died in office. He won election the following year.

Rhode Island allows voters who are not registered with a party to cast ballots in either Republican or Democratic primaries and on Tuesday, many of them gravitated toward Chafee.

An ecstatic Chafee pumped his arms in the air and emphasized his ability to work with people from both parties. He thanked Democratic-leaning independents who voted for him and said his victory was important nationally because it meant moderate Republicans nationally were “alive and kicking.”

In the Maryland race to fill the Senate seat held by retiring Democrat Paul Sarbanes, 20-year Rep. Ben Cardin was leading Kweisi Mfume, former head of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, by a 46-to-37 percent margin. The winner will face GOP Lt. Gov. Michael Steele, who is seeking to become the lone black Republican in the Senate.

Judges extended voting hours in Baltimore and in Montgomery County near Washington, D.C., by one hour because of problems that delayed the opening of some polling places. Officials said some election judges did not show up on time.

In New York, Clinton beat challenger Jonathan Tasini with more than 80 percent of the vote. She will face former Yonkers Mayor John Spencer.

Spitzer defeated Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi with more than 80 percent of the vote. He will be heavily favored in the fall against the GOP nominee, former legislative leader John Faso.

Former federal Housing Secretary Andrew Cuomo – son of former Gov. Mario Cuomo – defeated Mark Green, the former New York City Public Advocate, to win the Democratic nomination for attorney general.

Elsewhere:

● District of Columbia voters choose City Council member Adrian M. Fenty in the mayoral primary. In heavily Democratic Washington, the primary is tantamount to the general election.

● In Vermont, Rep. Bernie Sanders won the Democratic nomination for Senate. Sanders, who plans to run as an independent, aims to win the seat of retiring Sen. James Jeffords, the Senate’s lone independent. He will face the GOP nominee, businessman Richard Tarrant.

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